Subject: New York State Library grants
New York State Library Announces Seven Grants to Preserve Endangered Materials in Research Libraries. New York State Librarian Joseph F. Shubert today announced seven grants to research libraries for cooperation in preserving endangered research materials. The grants, totaling $350,000, will preserve collections of materials important to the State and will support research in preservation techniques. The grants are part of a Coordinated Preservation Program, enacted in 1984. They provide funds for cooperative activities among eleven comprehensive research libraries designated in Education law: Columbia University, Cornell University, the Research Libraries of the New York Public Library, the SUNY centers at Albany, Binghamton, Buffalo, and Stony Brook, New York State Library, New York University, Syracuse University and the University of Rochester. According to Barbara Lilley, Conservation/Preservation Program Officer in the New York State Library Development Team, the seven projects supported by the Coordinated Preservation Project Program in 1994-95 are: 1. Preserving the Literature of Natural History of the Northeastern Bio-region ($67,147, first year). In this three year project, Cornell and the New York State Library will complete the preservation of the core historical literature of natural history and natural resources in the bio-region surrounding and including New York. The 1994-95 grant is $67,147. The total award, over three years, will be $185,706 2. Digital Training for Preservation Administrators ($21,939). Cornell University, on behalf of the Eleven Comprehensive Research Libraries will conduct one-week training seminars for representatives from the Big 11 on the use of digital technology for preservation reformatting. Two participants from each Library will study components of imaging systems, costs and quality/production tradeoffs, longevity factors in digital information, and access- related issues. They will also prepare a preliminary proposal for a digital project based on their own collections, and select samples of materials from those collections that they will bring to Cornell for scanning. 3. Preservation of Photographic Materials ($36,396). New York University, Columbia University and Cornell University will preserve photographic negatives which are at risk of damage and deterioration because they are on glass or unstable nitrate or diacetate film bases. Such images suffer from breakage, delamination and chemical decomposition. The grant will assist the three research libraries in their ongoing efforts to preserve the visual and cultural histories depicted in their collections. The project will build on efforts initiated by two earlier New York State coordinated preservation grant projects. They will preserve 2,249 images from the three institutions in this project. 4. New York State Coordinated Science Serials Microfilming Project ($94,574). The Libraries of Columbia University and nine other research libraries will microfilm 800 volumes of brittle serials chosen from the areas of mathematics, physics, astronomy, and chemistry. All are of long term research importance, brittle, and already available on film. The participating libraries will attempt to put together a complete run of each title by pooling their holdings, Any remaining gaps will be filled as much as possible through borrowing from non- participant libraries. The project will produce three generations of microfilm and the participating libraries will enter the bibliographic records into RLIN or OCLC, making them accessible nationally and internationally. The participants include Columbia University, Cornell University, SUNY at Albany, SUNY at Binghamton, New York Public Library, SUNY at Buffalo, New York State Library, SUNY at Stony Brook, New York University, and the University of Rochester. 5. Enclosures and Air Pollution in Image Preservation ($42,133 for 1994-95). The University of Rochester, with the cooperation of seven other comprehensive research libraries will support a two-year scientific research and development project in library preservation. The research will investigate the deleterious effects of pollutants on color and back-and-white photographic materials, especially microfilms and test commonly available storage enclosures to determine the extent of protection afforded by each type and determine those best suited for storing various kinds of imaging materials. The Image Permanence Institute at Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, NY, is the prime contractor for the research. In June, 1993, the National Endowment for the Humanities awarded the Institute $206,000 and has committed an additional $47,000 in federal matching funds. The New York State comprehensive research libraries grant will help meet matching requirements. The participants, in addition to the University of Rochester, include Columbia University, SUNY at Stony Brook, New York Public Library, Syracuse University, SUNY at Binghamton, SUNY Albany SUNY at Buffalo, The New York State award will also provide $10,867 in 1995/96, for a total award of $47,000. 6. New York State Preservation Administrator Internship ($38,110 for 1994/95). This grant is for the second year of a three year project providing a professional level preservation administrator internship for librarians. The interns are drawn from among recent graduates of library institutions, and will be hosted by different Comprehensive Research Libraries. Three interns are being funded over the course of three years. Each internship will last ten months and each will take place at a different comprehensive research library. The sponsor of the project is Columbia University. Participants include Cornell University, New York University. The total of the grants over three years is $118,850. 7. Isoperms for Color Photography: a two-year preservation research and development project ($48,312 for 1994/95). The University of Rochester, and other New York State Comprehensive Research Libraries will support the second year of a two-year research at the Rochester Institute of Technology to investigate optimum storage strategies for color photography. The research tests the "isoperm" approach in which the effects of storage temperature and humidity on life expectancy are quantified over a wide range of possible conditions for color negative film, color slide film, color print paper, and cinema positive film now on the market. The data will be used to evaluate the adequacy and cost-effectiveness of present or planned storage environments and compare storage with other preservation options, such as remedial treatment or reformatting. The project is providing information useful to the American National Standards Institute Committee IT9 (which is responsible for film storage standards). The project will produce a publication useful to research libraries. Participants are University of Rochester, Columbia University, SUNY Binghamton, New York University, Syracuse University, Cornell University, SUNY Buffalo, SUNY Albany, and The New York Public Library. Grants for the two-year project total $115,151. For more information please contact Barbara Lilley Conservation/Preservation Program Officer 518-474-6971 *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:18 Distributed: Sunday, September 4, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-18-005 ***Received on Thursday, 1 September, 1994